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Earlier this year the American Brain Foundation presented B. Smith and her husband Dan Gasby the 2017 Public Leadership in Neurology Award (PLINA) during its Commitment to Cures dinner at the Westin Boston Waterfront in Boston, MA.

The couple joins a prestigious list of past PLINA winners, including journalist Bob Woodruff, retired professional athlete Tedy Bruschi, former Vice President Walter Mondale, actor Michael J. Fox and former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno.

Smith is a nationally recognized celebrity chef, restaurateur, supermodel and lifestyle maven who was diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease in 2013. Gasby recently joined the American Brain Foundation board of directors to help the Foundation make curing brain disease a high-profile, public cause.

PLINA honors an individual or group outside of the medical profession. Honorees are recognized for advancing public understanding and awareness of neurologic disease, being effective advocates for neuroscience research and making significant contributions to improve patient care.

“B. Smith and Dan Gasby embody all of the principles and values of the Public Leadership in Neurology Award,” says Kevin Goodno, board chair of the Minneapolis, MN-based American Brain Foundation, a national charity whose mission is to bring researchers and donors together to defeat brain disease.

“We’re grateful to have them working so hard for such a critical cause.”

The pair has been tirelessly advocating for Alzheimer’s patients and caregivers since Smith received her diagnosis, crisscrossing the country, making more than two dozen appearances at Alzheimer’s-related events. They co-authored the book Before I Forget: Love, Hope and Acceptance in our Fight Against Alzheimer’s, released by Random House in January 2016.

In their book, which includes a forward by Rudolph Tanzi, Ph.D., of Harvard University and 1996 recipient of the Potamkin Prize for Research in Pick’s, Alzheimer’s and Related Diseases, Smith and Gasby share their personal journey with Alzheimer’s disease and make a strong case for research funding.

They detail the particularly devastating impact of the disease on African Americans, who are twice as likely as non-Hispanic whites to develop late onset Alzheimer’s and less likely to have a diagnosis of their condition, which often results in less time for treatment and planning.

“We’re honored to receive the PLINA Award,” Gasby says. “Brain health is the greatest 21st-century civil rights issue, and we must admit now that we need more funding, more awareness and more compassion for the more than 50 million Americans afflicted with brain diseases.”